Headline image for page about Men are twice as likely than women to inherit the family business
Headline image for page about Men are twice as likely than women to inherit the family business
Insight
Men are twice as likely than women to inherit the family business
  • In a recent survey, 42% of owners surveyed said they were likely to pass on their company to a son.
  • In comparison, only 22% said their daughter would inherit the family firm. 

A survey conducted by Cynergy Bank found that 42 per cent of owners were likely to pass on their company to a son. But only 22 per cent of the 1,008 small business owners surveyed said that a daughter would inherit the family firm.

One-third of firms felt it was ‘only natural’ that the family business is passed on to a son, or another male relative. The research found that sectors such as construction – which are traditionally seen as more masculine – were more likely to prioritise male ownership.

In a world where gender bias is slowing dying out, it is quite a startling survey result.

However, there are signs of progress with almost half (45%) of family business owners claiming that the introduction of gender gap reporting has made them reconsider assumptions about gender and leadership.

There is a message to those Family Businesses who appoint a male heir to takeover:

  • Males do not necessarily make the best decisions. Ego, competitiveness and aggression can all get in the way of a 'good decision'.
  • When I am working with Leadership teams, I nearly always see the loud, noisy males make the worst decisions and the quiet female make the best decision.

Where the 'nextgen' children, especially the females of a family business owner might be lacking in skill and experiences, they can make up for it, if they have been taught a process of how to make a high-quality decisions. 

Once they have that process, then you will see the quality of the decision rise by as much as 50%. That could be the difference between seeing a family business succeed over multiple generations or disappear within three generations.